6.55 |
For the day being
gloriously broken, I awoke with some weariness, not
feeling clean and happy, not burning with love unto
my Lord Adonai, though ashamed indeed for that
thrice of four times in the night I had been
awakened by this loyal body, urging me to rise and
meditate—and my weak will bade it be at ease and
take its rest—oh, wretched man! slave of the hour
and of the worm! |
7.0-
7.16 |
Fifteen cycles of P.Y.
[Pranayama] put me right mentally and physically:
otherwise they had little apparent success. |
7.30 |
Have breakfasted—a pear
and two Garibaldis. (These by the way are the small
size, half the big squares.) |
7.30 |
Have smoked a pipe to show
that I’m not in a hurry. |
8.5 |
Hanged Man with mantra in Visuddhi. Thought I had
been much longer. At one point the Spirit began to
move—how the devil else can I express it? The
consciousness seemed to flow, instead of pattering.
Is that clear?
One should here note that
there may perhaps be some essential difference in
the operation of the Moslem and Hindu mantrams. The
latter boom; the former ripple. I have never tried
the former at all seriously until now. |
8.10-
8.32 |
Même jeu—no good at
all. Think I’ll get up and have a Turker. |
9.0 |
Am up, having read my
letters. Continuing mantra all the time in a more or
less conscious way. |
9.25 |
Wrote my letters and
started out. |
10.38 |
Have reached the Cafe de
la Paix, walking slowly with my mantra. I am
beginning to forget it occasionally, mispronouncing
some of the words. A good sign! Now and then I have
tried sending it up and down my spine, with good
effect. |
10.40 |
I will drink a cup of
coffee and then proceed to the Hammam. This may ease
my limbs, and afford an opportunity for a real
go-for-the-gloves effort to concentrate.
It cannot be too clearly
understood that nearly all the work hitherto has
been preliminary; the intention is to get the Chittam flowing evenly in one direction. Also one
practices detaching it from the Virttis
(impressions). One looks at everything without
seeing it.
O coffee! By the mighty
Name of Power do I invoke thee, consecrating thee to
the Service of the Magic of Light. Let the
pulsations of my heart be strong and regular and
slow! Let my brain be wakeful and active in its
supreme task of self-control! That my desired end
may be effected through Thy strength, Adonai, unto
Whom be the Glory for ever! Amen without lie, and
Amen, and Amen of Amen. |
11.0 |
I now proceed to the Hammam. |
12.0 |
The Bath is over. I
continued the mantra throughout, which much
alleviated the torture of massage. But I could not
get steady and easy in my Asana or even in the
Hanged Man or Shavasana. I think the heat is
exciting, and makes me restless. I Continue in the
cooling-room lying down. |
12.10 |
I have ordered 12 oysters
and coffee and bread and butter.
O oysters! be ye unto me
strength that I formulate the 12 rays of the Crown
of HVA! I conjure ye, and very potently command.
Even by Him who ruleth
Life from the Throne of Tahuti unto the Abyss of
Amennti, even by Ptah the swathed one, that
unwrappeth the mortal from the immortal, even by
Amoun the giver of Life, and by Khem the mighty,
whose Phallus is like the Pillar in Karnak! Even by
myself and my male power do I conjure ye. Amen. |
12.20 |
I was getting sleepy when
the oysters came. I now eat them in a Yogin and
ceremonial manner. |
12.45 |
I have eaten my oysters,
chewing them every one; also some bread and butter
in the same manner, giving praise to Priapus the
Lord of the oyster, to Demeter the Lady of corn, and
to Isis the Queen of the Cow. Further, I pray
symbolically in this meal for Virtue, and Strength,
and Gladness; as is appropriate to these symbols.
But I find it very difficult to keep the mantra
going, even in tune with the jaws; perhaps it is
that this peculiar method of eating (25 minutes for
what could be done normally in 3) demands the whole
attention. |
1.30 |
Drifted into a nap. Well!
we shall try what Brother Body really wants. |
1.35 |
My attempt to go to sleep
has made me supernaturally wakeful.
I am—as often before—in
the state described by Paul (not my masseur; the
other Paul!) in his Epistle to the Romans, cap. vii.
v. 19.
I shall arise and go
forth. |
1.55 |
I have a good mind to try
violent excitement of the Muladhara Cakkrâm; for the
whole Sushumna seems dead. This at the risk of being
labelled a Black Magician—by clergymen, Christian
Scientists, and the masturbating “self-reliant”
classes in general. |
2.15 |
Arrived (partly by cab) at
the Place. Certain curious phenomena which I have
noticed at odd times—e.g., on Thursday night—but did
not think proper to record must be investigated. It
seems quite certain that meditation-practices
profoundly affect the sexual process: how and why I
do not yet certainly know. |
2.45 |
Rubbish! everything
perfectly normal. Difficult, though, to keep mantram
going. |
3.0 |
Am sitting on the brink of
the big fountain in the Luxembourg. This deadness of
the whole system continues.
To explain. Normally, if
the thought be energetically directed to almost any
point in the body, that point is felt to pulse and
even to ache. Especially this is the case if one
vibrates a mantra or Magical name in a nerve-centre.
At present I cannot do this at all. The Prana seems
equilibrated in the whole organism: I am very
peaceful—just as a corpse is.
It is terribly annoying,
in a sense, because this condition is just the
opposite of Dharana; yet one knows that it is a
stage on the way to Samadhi.
So I rise and give
confidently the Sign of Apophis and Typhon, and will
then regard the reflection of the sweet October Sun
in the kissing waters of the fountain. (P.S.—I now
remember that I forgot to rise and give the Sign.) |
3.15 |
In vain do I regard the
Sun, broken up by the lips of the water into
countless glittering stars—abounding, revolving,
whirling forth, crying aloud—for He whom my soul seeketh is not in these. Nor is He in the fountain,
eternally as it jets and falls in brilliance of dew;
for I desire the Dew Supernal. Nor is He in the
still depths of the water; their lips do not meet
His. Nor—O my soul!—is He anywhere to be found in
thy secret caverns, unluminous, formless, and void,
where I wander seeking Him—or seeking rest from that
Search! O my soul!—lift thyself up; play the man, be
strong; harden thyself against thy bitter Fate; for
at the End thou shalt find Him; and ye shall enter
in together into the Secret Palace of the King; even
unto the Garden of Lilies; and ye shall be One for
evermore. So mote it be!
Yet now—ah now!—I am but a
dead man. Within me and without still stirs that
life of sense that is not life, but is as the worms
that feast upon my corpse—Adonai! Adonai! my Lord
Adonai! indeed, Thou hast forsaken me. Nay! thou
liest, O weak soul! Abide in the meditation; unite
all thy symbols into the form of a Lion, and be lord
of thy jungle, travelling through the servile
Universe even as Mau the Lion very lordly, the Sun
in His strength that travelleth over the heaven of
Nu in His bark in the mid-career of Day.
For all these thoughts are
vain; there is but One thought, though that thought
be not yet born—He only is God, and there is none
other God than He! |
3.30 |
Walking home with mantra;
suddenly a spasm of weeping took me as I cried
through the mantra—“My God, my God, why hast Thou
forsaken me?”—and I have to stop and put it down!
A good thing; for it calms
me. |
3.45 |
At the Dome, master of
myself. The Mantra goes just 30 times a minute, 1800
times an hour, 43,200 times a day. To say it a
million times would take longer than Mrs. Glyn’s
heroine did to conceive. Yet I will get the result
if I have to say it a hundred and eleven million
times. But oh! fertilise my Akasic egg to-day!
This remark, one should
notice, is truly characteristic of the man John St.
John. I see how funny it is; but I’m quite serious
withal. Ye dull dogs! |
3.55 |
N.B.—Mantras might with
advantage be palindromes. |
3.56 |
H V A,AL H, V A L, A Z I, L A I, LA H,A IL,A HV,A
4 Hs
3 Us
9 As
5 Ls
3 Is
1 Z
25
H |
I |
L |
I |
H |
A |
U |
A |
U |
A |
A |
L |
Z |
L |
A |
A |
A |
U |
A |
A |
H |
L |
I |
L |
H |
I try to construct a magic
square from the mantra. No good. But the mantra is
going much better, quite mechanically and “without
attachment.” |
4.10 |
I drink a “citron pressé.” |
4.25 |
Alas! here comes Maryt
[Mary
Waska]
(with a sad tale of hashish. It appears that she
fainted and spent some hours at the hospital. I
should have insisted on her staying with me; the
symptoms began immediately on her drinking some
coffee. I have noticed with myself, that eating has
started the action). |
5.30 |
An hour of mingled nap and
mantra. I now feel alive again. It was very strange
how calm and balanced I was: yet now I am again
energized; may it be to the point of Enthusiasm!
People will most assuredly
smile at this exalted mystic; his life seems made up
of sleep and love-making. Indeed, to-day I have been
shockingly under the power of Tamas. But that is
clearly a fatigue-effect from having worked so hard.
Oh Lord, how long? |
5.50 |
The Mantra still ripples
on. I am so far from the Path that I have a real
good mind to get Maryt to let me perform the Black
Mass on her at midnight. I would just love to bring
up Typhon, and curse Osiris and burn his bones and
his blood!
At least, I now solemnly
express a pious wish that the Crocodile of the West
may eat up the Sun once and for all, that Set may
defile the Holy Place, that the supreme Blasphemy
may be spoken by Python in the ears of Isis.
I want trouble. I want to
say Indra’s mantram till his throne gets red-hot and
burns his lotus-buttocks; I want to pinch little
Harpocrates till he fairly yells . . . and I will
too! Somehow! |
6.15 |
I have now got into a sort
of smug content, grinning all over like some sleepy
Chinese god. No reason for it, Lord knows!
I can’t make up my mind
whether to starve or sandwich or gorge the beast St.
John. He’s not the least bit hungry, though he’s had
nothing to call a Meal since Thursday lunch. The Hatha-Yoga feeding game is certainly marvellous.
I should like to work
marching and breathing with this mantra as I did of
old with Aum Tat Sat Aum. Perhaps two steps to a
mantra, and 4-8-16 steps to a breath-cycle? This
would mean 28 seconds for a breath-cycle; quite
enough for a marching man. We might try 4-8-8 to
start; or even 8-8-8 (for the Chariot, wherein the
Geburah of me rises to Binah. |
6.55 |
I shall now ceremonially
defile the Beyt Allah with Pig, to express in some
small measure my utter disgust and indignation with
Allah for not doing His job properly. I say in vain
“Labbaik!” He answers, “But I’m not here, old
boy—another leg-pull!” He little knows His man,
though, if He thinks He can insult me with impunity.
Andre, un sandwich! |
7.5 |
I shall stop mantra while
I eat, so as to concentrate (a) on the chewing, (b)
on defiling the House of God. Not so easy! the
damned thing runs on like a prairie fire. Important
then to stop it absolutely at will: even the Work
itself may become an obsession.
11 hours with no real
break—not bad.
The bad part of to-day
seems the Asana, and the deadness. Or, perhaps
worse, I fail to apprehend the true magical purport
of my work: hence all sort of aimless formulae,
leading—naturally enough—to no result.
It just strikes me—it may
be this Isis Apophis Osiris IAO formula that I have
preached so often. Certainly the first two days were
Isis—natural, pleasant, easy events. Most certainly
too to-day has been Apophis! Think of the wild
cursing and black magic, etc. . . . we must hope for
the Osiris section to-morrow or next day. Birth,
death, resurrection!
IAΩ! |
7.35 |
The Sandwich duly chewed,
and two Coffees drunk, I resume the mystic Mantra.
Why? Because I damn well choose to. Aum! |
7.50 |
‘Tis a rash thing to say,
and I burn incense to the Infernal Gods that the
Omen may be averted; but I seem to have conquered
the real Dweller of the Threshold once and for all.
For now-a-days my blackest despair is tempered by
the certainty of coming through it sooner or later,
and that with flying colours. |
9.30 |
The last ¾-hour I wasted
talking to Dr. Rowland, that most interesting man. I
don’t mean talking; I mean listening. You are a bad,
idle good-for-nothing fellow, O.M.! Why not stick to
that mantra? |
10.40 |
Have drunk two citrons pressés and gone to my room to work a mighty spell
of magick Art. |
11.0 |
Having got rid of Maryt
(who, by the way, is Quite mad), and thereby (one
might hope) of Apophis and Typhon, I perform the
Great Ritual
DCLXXI with good results magically; i.e., I
formulated things very easily and forcibly; even at
one time I got a hint of the Glory of Adonai. But I
made the absurd mistake of going through the Ritual
as if I was rehearsing it, instead of staying at the
Reception of the Candidate and insisting upon being
really received.
I will therefore now
(11.50) sit down again and invoke really hard on
these same lines, while the Perfume and the Vision
are yet formulated, though insensibly, about me.
And thus shall end the
Third day of my retirement. |